4.7 Article

Systematic evaluation of irinotecan-induced intestinal mucositis based on metabolomics analysis

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.958882

Keywords

cancer; irinotecan; metabolomics; gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; toxicity

Funding

  1. Bethune Charitable Foundation [B-19-H-20200622]
  2. Scientific Research Foundation of Shandong Medical Association [YXH2020ZX053]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of Shandong [ZR201911070207]
  4. Jining NO.1 People's Hospital [2021-BS-002]

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This study comprehensively analyzed the metabolite changes in a mouse model of irinotecan-induced intestinal mucositis, identifying 46 metabolites with significant changes in tissues and serum. The study highlighted key pathways related to these metabolites, offering insights into new biomarkers for diagnosis and treatment of intestinal mucositis.
Chemotherapy-induced intestinal mucositis (CIM) is a major dose-limiting side effect of chemotherapy, especially in regimens containing irinotecan (CPT-11). Several studies on the pathologic mechanisms of CIM focused on both the genomics and molecular pathways triggered by chemotherapy. However, systematic evaluation of metabolomic analysis in irinotecan-induced intestinal mucositis (IIM) has not been investigated. This study aimed to comprehensively analyze metabolite changes in main tissues of IIM mouse models. Male ICR mice were assigned to two groups: the model group (n = 11) treated with CPT-11 (20 mg/kg daily; i.p.) and the control group (n= 11) with solvent for 9 days. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) was used to investigate the metabolic alterations in the serum, intestinal, colonic, hepatic, and splenic samples of mice between two groups by multivariate statistical analyses, including GC-MS data processing, pattern recognition analysis, and pathway analysis. Forty-six metabolites, including hydrocarbons, amino acids, lipids, benzenoids, hydroxy acids, and amines, had significant changes in levels in tissues and sera of IIM mouse models. The most important pathways related to the identified metabolites were the glycerolipid metabolism in the colon and aminoacyl-tRNA biosynthesis; glycine, serine, and threonine metabolism; and glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism in the liver. Our study firstly provided a comprehensive and systematic view of metabolic alterations of IIM using GC-MS analysis. The characterizations of metabolic changes could offer profound and theoretical insight into exploring new biomarkers for diagnosis and treatment of IIM.

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